Thursday, May 28, 2026 - President Tinubu has celebrated Nigerian Children on the occasion of this year's International Children’s Day.
In a statement released, the President said while the world
marks this special day, prents and families of some Nigerian children and their
teachers in Oyo and Borno are living in despair following their abduction. The
President said as a father and their President, he will not forget nor abandon
them.
He mentioned that his government will not turn their pain
into ceremony and pledged to continue to work until the abducted children taken
from their homes, schools and communities are returned safely, and until those
who profit from this cruelty are brought to justice.
President Tinubu mentioned that he has directed all relevant
security agencies to sustain and intensify coordinated rescue operations for
abducted children and other vulnerable citizens across the country. The
President mentuoned that he has also directed the strengthening of school
protection measures in high-risk areas.
President Tinubu pointed out that protecting children cannot
be left solely to the government. He said Parents, teachers, traditional
rulers, religious leaders, community leaders, youth groups, transport unions,
local vigilantes and the media all have a role to play.
‘’When a
community sees strange movement around a school and keeps quiet, a child is
placed at risk. When warning signs are ignored, families suffer. When
information is shared quickly and responsibly, lives can be saved'' he said
Read his statement below
PRESIDENT
TINUBU'S STATEMENT ON CHILDREN'S DAY AND OUR CHILDREN IN CAPTIVITY
On this
Children’s Day, I celebrate every Nigerian child. I celebrate the child who is
excelling in school. I celebrate the child who is learning a trade. I celebrate
the child living with disability and still pressing forward with courage. I
celebrate the child who has lost much but has not lost hope.
Today
belongs to you. It is a day to celebrate your innocence, your strength, your
creativity, your aspirations, and the immeasurable value you bring to our
nation. You are the pride of our Republic, the custodians of tomorrow’s
promise, and the living reminder that we can shape the future of Nigeria by the
opportunities we create for our children today.
The theme
for this year’s celebration, “Future Now: Promoting Inclusion for Every
Nigerian Child,” speaks powerfully to the soul of our national conscience. It
reminds us that the future is not a distant promise; it is already here.
As we mark
this special day, which coincides with Eid-el-Kabir, some Nigerian children and
their teachers in Oyo and Borno should be with their families, but are being
held captive by criminals. Some children have been forced into fear. Some
parents cannot join today’s celebration because their hearts are set on one
prayer: ‘Bring our children home.’
To those
children, their parents, and their teachers, I say this as a father and your
President: you are not forgotten. You are not abandoned.
To the
families grieving and despondent, your government will not turn your pain into
ceremony. We will continue to work until children taken from their homes,
schools and communities are returned safely, and until those who profit from
this cruelty are brought to justice.
I have
directed all relevant security agencies to sustain and intensify coordinated
rescue operations for abducted children and other vulnerable citizens across
the country. These operations must be intelligence-led, carefully executed and
focused on the safe recovery of our children.
I have also
directed the strengthening of school protection measures in high-risk areas.
This will include updated school vulnerability mapping, closer coordination
between state governments and security commands, rapid response links between
schools and local security units, and stronger community-based early warning
systems.
The Federal
Ministry of Education, working with state governments, is to deepen the
implementation of the Safe Schools framework with clear reporting, clear
responsibility and clear timelines. Every school in a vulnerable area must know
who to call, what to do, where to move, and how to protect children when danger
is identified.
We will also
improve support for children who have survived abduction, violence and
displacement. Rescue is not the end of the government’s duty. A child who
returns from trauma must return to care, medical attention, counselling,
education and dignity. I have directed the relevant ministries and agencies to
ensure that recovered children receive proper reintegration support, not
temporary attention.
Let me also
state that protecting children cannot be left solely to the government.
Parents, teachers, traditional rulers, religious leaders, community leaders,
youth groups, transport unions, local vigilantes and the media all have a role
to play. When a community sees strange movement around a school and keeps
quiet, a child is placed at risk. When warning signs are ignored, families
suffer. When information is shared quickly and responsibly, lives can be saved.
This is why
we will continue to strengthen the link between communities and security
agencies. The fight to protect children must begin before an attack happens,
not after one has already occurred.
My
administration remains committed to a Nigeria where every child can learn
safely, grow in good health, eat well, access opportunity and dream without
fear. We are investing in education, health care, nutrition, social protection,
digital skills and safer communities because childhood must not be a privilege
reserved for a few. It is the right of every Nigerian child.
To our
children, you matter—your dreams matter; your safety matters. Your education
matters. Be assured that your future matters to this government and to this
nation, and we will safeguard it.

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